How To Serve Multiple Ghost Blogs on One VPS Using Nginx Server Blocks

Introduction

Ghost is a great new blogging platform that simplifies the process of getting a blog up and running. It boasts a clean interface and an easy-to-use interface.

In this article, we will discuss a method of using one VPS to host multiple blogs. We will be configuring two domain names that will resolve to different instances of Ghost being hosted on the same system.

Prerequisites

This also assumes that you have two separate domain names that you will be using for each of your blogs. They both should be pointed at your VPS instance that you created for your Ghost blog. To learn how to configure your domain names correctly, click here.

Finally, we assume that you are logged into your Ghost droplet as root.

Stop Running Services

Before we begin, we should stop the Ghost service to avoid problems down the line:

service ghost stop

This will ensure that we aren't moving files that are opened by the Ghost process.

We want to do the same with nginx, just to be safe:

service nginx stop

Modify the Nginx Configuration

The first thing we need to do is adjust the nginx configuration. At the moment, nginx (our web server) is configured to pass all requests to a single location. We need to create different paths depending on what site our visitors are trying to reach.

Begin by navigating to the nginx directory where Ghost is configured. We will rename the Ghost configuration file to describe our first domain, and then copy it to a file that represents our second domain. These names are only for our reference, so you can change them as you'd like:

Change the server_name parameter to match your first site's domain name. It is important to get this part right, because it is the only way that nginx will know which Ghost instance to pass control to.

server_name firstsite.com

Save and close the file.

Next, we need to perform a similar operation on our second site configuration. Open it with your text editor:

nano secondsite.conf

We need to change the server_name parameter again to match our second site's domain name. Again, make sure this is accurate:

server_name secondsite.com

We also need to change the port that should be used for our second site. Right now, this configuration would send all of the traffic to the same node.js instance, instead of splitting it between the two sites.

Change the proxy_pass parameter. We need to change the port number at the end to another number. It can be any port number that isn't being used by another process.

proxy_pass http://localhost:2777

Save and close the file.

Restart nginx by typing:

service nginx restart

Change the Ghost Configuration

Now, we need to mirror our changes in the Ghost configuration files. Go to the web root directory:

cd /var/www

We need to make a directory for each of our Ghost sites:

mkdir firstsite.com
mkdir secondsite.com

Now, we need to move the Ghost directory into each of the new folders:

cp -r ghost firstsite.com
mv ghost secondsite.com

Now, we can open the first site's Ghost configuration:

nano /var/www/firstsite.com/ghost/config.js

Find the production section by searching for the string production: {. Change the url parameter to match the name of your first site:

. . .
production: {
url: 'http://firstsite.com'
. . .

Save and close the file.

Next, open the matching file for the second site:

nano /var/www/secondsite.com/ghost/config.js

Again, find the production: { section. Change the url parameter to match the second site's domain:

. . .
production: {
url: 'http://secondsite.com'
. . .

Next, scroll down a bit to the server: { section of the production block. Change the port parameter to match the number you selected for the proxy port in the second site's nginx configuration:

port: '2777'

Save and close the file.

Create Upstart Scripts

The easiest way to manage separate Ghost installations is through Upstart scripts. This will allow you to start, stop, restart, and check the status of each site individually.

Currently, there is a System V init script located at /etc/init.d/ghost. If you are following this guide, delete the old System V script. This will help avoid confusion and can prevent the service starting with the wrong settings:

rm /etc/init.d/ghost

We will be creating a new configuration for each site. We will be using an alternative to System V called Upstart, because it has simpler syntax.

Change to the directory where Upstart keeps its scripts:

cd /etc/init

Create a file for your first site:

nano ghost-firstsite.conf

Inside, we will place the following code. Change the values in red to match your first site's configuration: